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Top Calfishing.com Saltwater Fishing in California topic #10299
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Subject: "Orange County Surf Fishing" Previous topic | Next topic
finaddictSun Jul-13-03 07:50 PM
Member since Jul 13th 2003
2 posts
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#10299, "Orange County Surf Fishing"


          

Hi, my girlfriend and I have decided to take up surf fishing as a hobby. We figure we should learn quickly and be successful due to the fact we both are experts on bottom feeders.

I live in Dana Point and my friend lives in Santa Ana. We have gone twice to doheny and caught small spotfin, corbina and leopard sharks.
We both have pretty cheap spinning set ups, but I figure you all out there can set us straight on what we need.

Can you suggest a place for us to go where we could catch some fish?

Thank you Finaddict :)

  

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Replies to this topic
RE: Orange County Surf Fishing, BB, Jul 13th 2003, #1
RE: Orange County Surf Fishing, fishtrap_man, Jul 14th 2003, #2
      RE: Orange County Surf Fishing, Aztecwin, Jul 14th 2003, #3
      RE: Orange County Surf Fishing, finaddict, Jul 14th 2003, #4
           RE: Orange County Surf Fishing, Grom85, Jul 14th 2003, #5
Some Surf Fishing Reading Material..., Leapin Bass, Jul 20th 2003, #6

BBSun Jul-13-03 10:01 PM
Member since Nov 21st 2002
40 posts
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#10300, "RE: Orange County Surf Fishing"
In response to Reply # 0


          

How tall of rod. You can have a low cost rod and still do a pretty good job. The distance is what I think you need to know about. For most people that question come up alot in lenght of rod. In my rods I like 7 but would tell people to start up in 8" or highier range. Just good to wal-mart and feel the different lenghts and rod action. To get a idea what type you want. Hope this help you. Some other people will give there ideas too. Happy fishing from BB.

  

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fishtrap_manMon Jul-14-03 04:27 PM
Member since Jun 27th 2003
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#10312, "RE: Orange County Surf Fishing"
In response to Reply # 1


  

          

There are three zones to surf fishing. Zone 1 is 5 to 10 feet. Zone 2 is 10 to 20. And zone 3 is 20 and longer. Zone one you will need a 6" fresh water spinning rod and reel med action,with 4 to 10 lb line on it. Zone 2 a little longer rod. A 7" to 8" salt water spinning rod and reel with 15 to 20 lb line med action. Zone 3 a 9" to 12" foot rod spinning reel with 20 to 30 lb line med action. The fish in zone 1 is pearch,corvina and croakers.The fish in zone 2 is big pearch, big corvina, croakers and rays. The fish in zone 3 are rays,sharks,sand bass,white sea bass,and halibut.

  

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AztecwinMon Jul-14-03 05:27 PM
Member since Mar 04th 2002
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#10314, "RE: Orange County Surf Fishing"
In response to Reply # 2


          

And then there is the "Twilight Zone" where, regardless of what equipment you tote to the beach, you get spooled every time. }(

Aztecwin

  

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finaddictMon Jul-14-03 09:16 PM
Member since Jul 13th 2003
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#10319, "RE: Orange County Surf Fishing"
In response to Reply # 2


          

thank you Fishtrap man,
What you had to say makes so much sence. When you said the zones are 10 to 20, do you mean 10 to 20 feet away from the beach or feet deep of water? I really thank you for your tips.

  

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Grom85Mon Jul-14-03 11:15 PM
Member since May 09th 2002
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#10321, "RE: Orange County Surf Fishing"
In response to Reply # 4


          

For the surf i actually prefer light equipment...4-6 pound test and a trout rig works just fine for those perch and corbina.

Save a wave, Ride a surfer.

  

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Leapin BassSun Jul-20-03 09:17 PM
Member since Nov 06th 2001
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#10358, "Some Surf Fishing Reading Material..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://www.swimbait.com/techniques/perch-fong.htm
http://www.swimbait.com/halibut
http://www.swimbait.com/surfhalibut

  

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